First, THANK YOU so much for taking the time to answer and share with me. It seems like I posted and ghosted, but it's been an emotional week and I've been reading, but haven't had the time to process much or emotional ability to respond.
What's Right - I see how much you love your kids and struggle when they struggle. Thanks for making me feel like I'm not alone.
JeannieGirl - Thank you. Of course I live smack dab in the middle of the PFLAG chapters in my metroplex, but I've sent emails to find out about meetings. It would be great to have support from other people who have walked in my shoes.
Sally24 -
She still doesn't understand why that isn't a good idea. And her girlfriend wasn't out to her mom, either, so I struggled with that. I just let them both know that I cared about both of them. (They have since broken up.)
I think this is the hardest part. The other parents don't know and the other girl isn't ready to tell them, so I hate having this information about their child being sexually active (still not sure what happened with the sleepover but the sexting is definitely more than I am comfortable with). As the parent of a teenager, my initial instinct was to make sure age-appropriate boundaries are set and that there are eyes on them like they would be on heteronormative teens.
as for
As far as the therapist goes, who said she was fine, your dd or her therapist?
The therapist basically dropped her because she said she wasn't really sharing much. My daughter said at that time that she was fine and wasn't interested in finding someone else. This week my daughter said she didn't feel comfortable and told the therapist NOTHING. So we have started looking for more choices and I told her we'd search until we find someone she feels okay sharing hard things with.
Thank you for sharing Ditchthelabels. I've looked at some of the resources and will share it with my daughter as well.
Ellie - Hi! YES! She's having a hard time separating the orientation issue with the "I lied to my parents so my girlfriend could sleep over" issue. I keep telling her this is a parenting a teen thing, and the only reason it's more complicated is because I CAN'T talk to the other person's parents about setting boundaries when the girls are together or make sure eyes are on them at church activities (apparently the other girl wanted her to sneak into the bathroom to make out during youth and they've were just at a lock-in together). Or even make sure that their middle schooler is "dating" a freshman (which TBH, I think is weird bc there is such a big difference between MS and HS in my opinion). It's hard for her to see that I'd be doing the same thing with a boy, but the situation makes things more complex. Thanks for mentioning the Trevor Project. It looks like they have hotlines, so I shared those with my daughter and am thinking of having her share them with the other girl - it also has a way for kids to connect, which is so important. Living in a very red area, there's not too much public support.
Tred - Thank you for sharing your sister's story. I am sorry that she struggled, but I love the end and I'm glad she had a brother like you. This is exactly why I am hoping I can help my daughter feel loved and supported. I don't want her to ever feel "less than" or try to pretend she's someone else to please others. Life is hard enough.
Tush - Thanks for sharing. I'm glad your niece is finding her happy. I have now read umpteen articles by people who are LGBTQ and my biggest take-away is how HARD this all is and how heartbreaking some reactions from family, friends and community can be. I definitely wish this was all happening three years from now, but I agree that middle school is just too young.
Just so you know stuff happens even when you are a vigilant parent.
Your story was actually one of my having teenager anxieties. My kids are 3 years apart in school and I've heard horror stories about sleepovers and sex between siblings/friends. I always pictured myself sleeping in the hallway if they ever had friends over at the same time, but it's hasn't happened yet. Kids will definitely find a way. I know I didn't always make the best choices either.
HellFire - Thank you so much for your wisdom.
I may have felt differently if I found all of this on my own. I'm fortunate that my daughter came out to me. There hasn't been any secrecy. She's very open with me,and I am with her as well.
Yes, unfortunately the way I found out was a little too close to my DDay 1 and it really threw me into a bad place for a couple of days. It wasn't the orientation per say, but the secrecy, the lying, the graphic nature of the texts I read, and more importantly the stuff I found about her harming herself and being bullied. I felt like I failed to make myself a safe space for her. I am glad your relationship with your daughter is close. I hope that we'll get closer to that someday.
Get her back into therapy. Stress to her that it's not because she is bisexual, but because you want her to feel free to speak to an unbiased third party who can help her with the challenges she is going through.
I agree and am working on it. I actually don't think her most pressing issue is her sexuality, but her depression and anxiety. I've asked my therapist for someone who is affirming as unfortunately many recommendations of my friends with anxiety/OCD kids are "Christian" counselors (and while I'd love to think that all Christian counselors would be loving, I can't take that chance). I'm glad your daughter finds therapy helpful. Hopefully I can find someone that my daughter trusts.
Thanks for the sleepover mention. This is the kind of thing that I don't really have experience with. I do not want her current friendships damaged and if I can trust that she'll be honest about her relationships and respect boundaries, it would be easier to deal with!
She has since told me my response was perfect. I treated it like it wasn't a big deal..because it wasn't a big deal.
This is beautiful to read.
Bluer than Blue
You know this other girl’s mother, you go to the same church, you’re friendly with each other, and you’re not a homophobic monster… why do you assume that the other mother will be
I actually don't assume that at all. I have no idea how she'll react. I have been in bible study with her and she has talked about a cousin that came out as a transsexual and how awful their whole family reacted to it. She herself said she didn't know how she felt about it. She is from a very small town in Mississippi and they are very religious. That said, her daughter is very masculine in her dress and has a poster of a wrestler in a bikini above her bed, so I'm guessing they have an inkling. However, I've talked with my daughter and this other girl has NOT come out to her parents and is not ready to. I will NOT out her to her parents. This is why I told my daughter that she cannot continue a relationship with this girl. If she wanted to, I would need to talk with the other girl's parents first and that can't happen if she doesn't WILLINGLY COME OUT TO HER PARENTS first. I will NOT out her. I've read two books this week and countless articles and essays. There is no way in hell I'm making that choice for another person.
I feel like you are attacking ME here, by the way. Would I want to know? Of course. I feel AWFUL and GUILTY that I couldn't just call the other mom and say "hey, here's what I found." At first, I thought that the girl was out to her family and I could just do that. Then I found out she was not out and not ready because she didn't know what her parents would do. Honestly, I'd hope if the situation were reversed that the other parent cared enough about my child's mental health not to threaten her. Even my kid, growing up in a household that is vocal about our acceptance of those who identify LGBTQ, was scared to be honest with me. If she finds out and is upset, I'd understand. But I hope she'd understand why I did it. If the shoe were on the other foot, I'd just be sad that my child didn't feel like I was safe to open up to. As I do now. I'm not sure what "help" your post was meant to give, but I'd appreciate if you refrained from any further questioning of me and my morality. The very last thing I need right now is someone judging me for trying to figure out the best way to handle this very tricky situation.
Editing today to add: BTB, after thinking, I'm going to take your post as well-meaning and I'm sorry I got rankled. Obviously it touched a nerve. Honesty is one of my core values - always has been and other people lying is a big trigger for me post DDay (my husband and kids know this - doesn't stop my kids from lying, but they do know lying is a big deal to me). So holding onto information or keeping a "secret" from this other girl's parents, makes me feel horrible, but she's not a lying cheating husband, she's a scared kid. Now if she was in danger, or talking about harming herself, etc, then I 100% would be talking to her parents. But outing her is just wrong on any level.
Thanks again to everyone who shared and gave helpful advice, this place is full of some incredibly wise and wonderful humans.
[This message edited by TX1995 at 5:54 PM, Monday, October 24th]